Cotton towels remove more bacteria from your hands than air dryers

The performance of cotton towels in removing bacteria from hands is over and above the minimum requirement set by the European hand washing standard EN 1499. The performance of jet and warm air dryers, however, did not meet the European standard requirements.

The baseline measurement is the level of bacteria on the hands after they were contaminated and before they were dried.

Cotton removes more bacteria from hands than jet air and warm air dryers:

Cotton performs over and above the European standard minimum
requirements and is therefore a more hygienic hand drying solution.

Proper hand drying is essential to hand hygiene

Hand hygiene is the single most important measure to reduce the burden of healthcare-associated infections.

Crucially, as the transmission of bacteria is more likely to occur from wet skin than from dry skin, the proper drying of hands after washing is an essential component of hand hygiene. Wet hands that touch a surface will contaminate a clean surface - or be contaminated by a dirty one - more quickly than properly dried hands.

Therefore, once effectively dried, the risk of re-contamination of hands is hugely reduced.

Some facts about hand hygiene

In everyday life, however, we know that:

Only 5% of people using washrooms wash their hands long enough to kill the germs that cause infections*;

33% of people do not use soap due to its drying effect on the skin*;

10% of people don't wash their hands at all*.

*Source: Borchgrevink et al. 2013, Journal of Environmental Health

Cotton towel dispensers have very hygienic surfaces

The surfaces of cotton towel dispensers carry significantly less risk of contamination for wet hands than the surfaces of jet air dryers.

The jet air dryer is the only device which showed heavy contamination, including E-coli, with a particularly heavy concentration at the inside bottom of the dryer (Fig. 1);

A small number of bacteria were found on the warm air dryer, where it is most likely to be touched by wet hands;

A small number of bacteria were found on the paper dispenser, where it is most likely to be touched by wet hands;

An insignificant amount of bacteria was found on the cotton towel dispenser..

Read more on the contamination of dryer surface

When testing the contamination of the surfaces of the four drying methods, the most commonly touched parts of each dispenser or dryer were swabbed (Fig. 2):

The study was carried out according to the European standard EN 1499: Chemical disinfectants and antiseptics - Hygienic handwash - Test method and requirements (phase 2/step2), April 2013.

Cotton towels lead to a better air quality

Cotton towels lead to a better air quality in the washroom than air dryers.

Read more on bacteria in the air

Tests to quantify the number of bacteria in the air in the vicinity of the air dryers show the following crosscontamination effect:

within 1m of the jet air dryer, a significant amount of bacteria was found in the air, including E-coli;

the air in the washroom can still be highly contaminated by aerosol up to 2m distance from the air dryers;

bacteria were quasi non-existent in the air surrounding the cotton and paper dispensers at a distance of 1m or 2m.

Put simply:

It would appear that bacteria are dispersed via the air stream of air dryers and that this leads to contamination of the surrounding air. This phenomenon was not found with cotton and paper towels.

Limiting the spread of pathogenic microbes is particularly important in healthcare environments.

The use of cotton towels leads to a better air quality than the use of air dryers in the washroom.

Hjelt Institute of Hygiene and Microbiology of the University of Helsinki Report

The contents of this page are based on the Comparative study of four drying methods: cotton towels, paper towels, jet air dryer and warm air dryer - A research report of the Hjelt Institute of Hygiene and Microbiology of the University of Helsinki. Kirsi Laitinen, PhD. Click here to download.

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